Atomlib was originally written for WordPress and contributed under the GPL. The original contributor later added it to Google Code and offered it under the Apache License. It shouldn't even be considered an external package, but come 3.2, it's going to be replaced anyway. Considering this one as fixed.

Copyright 2006 Elias Torres <elias@torrez.us>
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I see a conflict in putting a GPL v2 licensed code into a package that grants usage under GPL v1 from 2007-01-24 ongoing.

A similar conflict between the Wordpress licensing and KSES licensing resulted in ​changing Wordpress licensing terms. Wordpress.org did put code licensed under GPL v2+ into it's GPL package that by it's own license granted usage under GPL v1 as well. You find the related issue here: #16039

Also, it is worth pointing out that the GPLv2 is fully cross-compatible with the GPLv1. The change in v2 was to add section 7 which basically clarifies that if you cannot fulfill the license terms, you have no right to distribute the software. This is not a new restriction in the sense of the GPLv1's no-extra-restrictions clause, and therefore v2 and v1 are completely cross-compatible (which is not the case with the GPLv3).

Therefore there is no actual conflict. A GPLv1 package can legitimately contain GPLv2 code and vice-versa, as there's no extra restrictions on GPLv2 code under the GPLv1 definition.

Atomlib was originally written for WordPress and contributed under the GPL. The original contributor later added it to Google Code and offered it under the Apache License. It shouldn't even be considered an external package, but come 3.2, it's going to be replaced anyway. Considering this one as fixed.

I beg your pardon, but you didn't add any additional information to clarify this since longer - even already asked for. I'd wished we could have reached a bit more clarification.

It's unclear for me which version of the GPL exactly (last referenced was the SVN version). Next to the GPL version it looks like that atomlib itself might have been licensed under apache 2.0 only and has been brought into wp later on. That's far away from knowing what technically happened. Even if it always has been contributed under GPL v1+ as suggested, I don't see myself being able to show this formally with the information available so far.

I can however understand to insist that atomlib has been released under GPL v1 or later because the original author did provide the patches. One even must insist on that for the packages containing the code in question so far as I can not see any additional argument that supports that position. Otherwise this would either have technically violated the GPL or ASL or both.

Anyway, the best suggestion I can give is to contact the original author and ask. If it was not available under GPL v1 or later, then most probably that happened in error. We could nicely ask for relicensing back in time. I think the original author is pretty supportive. Problem solved.

If it was licensed under GPL v1 or later all the time, then we at least know that for sure as well - no big deal at all.

The other alternative I see to get more clarification with this issue is that wordpress.org provides some better information that the code has been contributed under GPL v1 or later. But from the reactions I don't know if that really is an option otherwise I think such information would have already been presented.

Unless there is no wish of wordpress.org to go in the one or other direction and unless no new information becomes available, this issue has come to an end of what was possible to clarify at this point.

Atomlib was originally written for WordPress and contributed under the GPL. The original contributor later added it to Google Code and offered it under the Apache License. It shouldn't even be considered an external package, but come 3.2, it's going to be replaced anyway. Considering this one as fixed.

The package was added in August 2007 from external, it was referenced and is now @link'ed in the code.

As stated above, Atomlib was originally written for WordPress, A later version was then written (by the author, offered by the author as a patch upon their existing work) for WordPress, which was also released on Google Code (under a differnet licence).

The version included in WordPress is inheritly GPL v2 or later due to it's roots in the project, The author excercised their right of releasing it under a seperate license on Google code, this does not invalidate the license upon which it was included into WordPress as.

The fact the link directs to a copy of the code under a different license is not a valid point to call the file Apache licensed, as, because as noted, it isn't exactly an "External Library" It's a core part of WordPress released as a seperate entity.

The package was added in August 2007 from external, it was referenced and is now @link'ed in the code.

As stated above, Atomlib was originally written for WordPress, A later version was then written (by the author, offered by the author as a patch upon their existing work) for WordPress, which was also released on Google Code (under a different license).

I find it fruitless to just exchange arguments, will write more to that at the end. But for the sake of the arguments, they still need to be correct in the details:

From what I can see is that Ellias Torres wrote an "An Atom Publishing Protocol implementation for WordPress" (app.php). ​That code was released under GPL v2 or later and has been put into Wordpress while wordpress still was released under GPL (not version restricted). That means the original commit already technically violated the license. So much for the "originally written version" and assumed it was released under GPL v2 or later. Keep in mind that Elias Torres had a SVN of it's own to develop the code.

The later version you talk about has been published on google code under an incompatible license and has been "brought in" as the changeset states. In case it was brought in - which is the documentation about what was done - there technicallyis a violation. Please mind the technically.

Making this argument does not mean that I won't trust the general mood of goodness about this. I assume it's merely a clarification issue and not more.

The version included in WordPress is inheritly GPL v2 or later due to it's roots in the project, The author excercised their right of releasing it under a seperate license on Google code, this does not invalidate the license upon which it was included into WordPress as.

Well GPL v2 is technically part of the problem. Wordpress was released under non-version restricted GPL. If the code had restricted it to GPL v2 or later, the package was technically not validly licensed any longer. Keep in mind that this is pretty a technical side of view. Albeit I'd like to clarify it.

The fact the link directs to a copy of the code under a different license is not a valid point to call the file Apache licensed, as, because as noted, it isn't exactly an "External Library" It's a core part of WordPress released as a seperate entity.

The link in there is merely a note of the file's source and putting it under the domain of the Atomlib project. That the file has been brought into wordpress does not mean that it has been coded for wordpress and more specifically under wordpress's license. The fact alone that it has come from some implementation for wordpress into a library of it's own with it's own name "atomlib", a definition of a project "atomlib" and a website of it's own on google-code is specifically a sign that it's not part of wordpress core but an external library.

Not to forget, that the commit explicitly states, that it brings that library in.

As you can see, there are just contradicting arguments. I never said there aren't any contradictions. And I can perfectly see that Elias Torres was actively working with the wordpress community. But as much as for everybody within the worpdress community licensing things were unclear, I can not assume that all details were clear for Elias Torres. Instead I'm actively suggesting to just ask to clarify this because we can not document that the code was given under GPL (not version restricted).

The easiest thing I can imagine is to contact the original author and ask if the code then and now is available under GPL. Things solved. The problem is only complicated as long it has not yet been clarified. That's the best answer to all open questions as well, instead of making assumptions what was or was not. I think no-one of us can do so but the original author. Really.